Ragged play, free agency frenzy ahead for NFL

By BARRY WILNER -
Associated Press -
Monday, July 25, 2011

Frantic. Chaotic. Ragged.

That will be the NFL for the next few weeks, perhaps longer.

Everything about the next few weeks, perhaps months, will be tough. The lockout erased all offseason activities; dozens of players, particularly rookies or those whose coaching staffs have changed, haven’t seen playbooks yet. And it prevented players from working out at team facilities with team doctors and trainers, a key to staying in football shape.

Now the product on the field might not match what the NFL usually provides, and that could be the biggest impact of the 4 1/2-month lockout.

“Chaos,” Jets fullback Tony Richardson said Monday after the players’ executive committee and team representatives approved a labor agreement with the league. “That’s the best word for it _ chaos.”

That can’t be a good thing _ for players, coaches, trainers, even agents.

“I don’t think the product is going to be as good as early, especially if we have to play a preseason game as it’s scheduled on a week’s practice,” Cardinals star receiver Larry Fitzgerald said. “That’s going to be tough.”

If fans thought preseason games were ugly affairs before, just wait.

And don’t wait for the big stars to make many appearance, at least not until deep into the preseason. The first two weeks of exhibition games might look like scrimmages _ college scrimmages.

“I think we have to be very careful with these training camp practices and preseason games,” Bengals tight end Reggie Kelly said. “A lot of players don’t have playbooks, a lot of young guys are not acclimated to the NFL yet. You have to gradually work guys into the NFL system. I could see guys suffer a lot of injuries, a lot of miscues and blown assignments. That’s not what you want out of NFL football. You want to give the fans a good, quality game. Even if you err on the side of caution, I think that’s good.”

Tell that to the folks dishing out regular-season prices for tickets.

Then again, maybe they should be used to hiding their eyes.

“How much sloppier can it get?” said Vikings linebacker Ben Leber, a plaintiff in the antitrust lawsuit that 10 players filed against the NFL on March 11. “You look at the first couple games of the preseason, even when we have minicamps and OTAs, the quality of play is to the point where nobody feels good about it. Now that we’ve missed all this offseason time, there are going to be even more growing pains for everybody.”

With rookies and fringe players eager to impress, the prospect of injuries is greater than ever.

“The lack of offseason will seriously affect those that have not prepared on their own or at a facility,” said Brian Martin, CEO of TEST Football Clubs in Florida and New Jersey, places where dozens of NFL players train. “Based on working with over 60 active NFL guys, I believe it is roughly 50-50 with those that are workers and those who are not. Many rely on natural gifts, and they will be affected with the lack of mandatory conditioning.